Detection of microhemorrhage in posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome using susceptibility-weighted imaging

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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: PRES-related vasogenic edema is potentially reversible while hemorrhage occurs in only 15.2%-17.3% of patients. However, the true incidence of hemorrhage could be higher when SWI is considered. Thus, we set out to determine the incidence of MH, SAH, and IPH in PRES by using SWI and to particularly evaluate whether such MHs are reversible. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Thirty-one patients with PRES and SWI were included, 17 having follow- up SWI. Two neuroradiologists reviewed SWI, FLAIR, DWI, and CE-T1WI. The presence and number of MHs (<5 mm) on SWI, SAH, and IPH (>5 mm) were recorded at presentation and follow-up. We evaluated associations between the presence of MH on SWI and DWI lesions, SAH, IPH, contrast enhancement, and MR imaging severity. RESULTS: Hemorrhage was present in 20/31 patients (64.5%), with MHs on SWI in 18/31 (58.1%) at presentation and in 11/17 (64.7%) at follow-up. SAH was present in 3/31 on SWI and 4/31 on FLAIR, while 2/31 had IPH. At follow-up, no patients had acquired new MHs; 2/5 MHs in 1 patient resolved. Four patients with available SWI before PRES developed MHs after PRES onset. No association was found between the presence of MHs on SWI and DWI, SAH, IPH, enhancement, and MR imaging severity (all P > .05). CONCLUSIONS: SWI showed a higher rate of MH than previously described, underscoring the potential of SWI in evaluating PRES. Such MHs typically persist and may develop after PRES onset. However, the clinical relevance of MHs in PRES is yet to be determined. We propose that MHs in PRES relate to endothelial cell dysfunction.

Figures

  • Fig 1. Patients with PRES on SWI, with the frequency of MH and other subtypes of hemorrhage.
  • Fig 2. A 50-year-old woman with seizure and a history of hypertension who presented with “mild” PRES-related cortical and subcortical edema (dashed arrows) on a 3T FLAIR MR image (A), with a small underlying MH (arrow) on SWI (B). On a follow-up 3T FLAIR MR image (C), the PRES-related edema had mostly resolved, while the tiny MH persisted on SWI (D).
  • Fig 3. A 51-year-old hypertensive woman with unilateral moderate edema from PRES on 3T FLAIR images. This likely occurred unilaterally because the patient had a severe ( 90%) left carotid bulb stenosis, which presumably prevented hyperperfusion of the left cerebral hemisphere. B, There is a small amount of SAH (arrows) on SWI. On a follow-up 3T MR imaging performed 70 days later, FLAIR image (C) demonstrated resolution of the PRESrelated edema, while the SAH had also resolved on SWI (D).
  • Fig 4. A 48-year-old woman with severe extent of PRES on 1.5T FLAIR images (A and B), based on involvement of the cerebellum (arrows, A), basal ganglia (arrows, B), and brain stem (not shown) and because the cerebral edema extends from the ventricular margin to the cortex (B). Although the severity was denoted, SWI on that presenting MR image (C) did not demonstrate any MH. Follow-up FLAIR image (D) obtained on the same magnet 22 days later had nearly normal findings, and no MHs were noted on the follow-up SWI images either (not shown).
  • Fig 5. A 52-year-old patient with cyclosporine toxicity. Eleven days before the seizure, a pretransplant surveillance 3T MR imaging with FLAIR (A), SWI (B), and postcontrast T1WI (C) had normal findings. At presentation for seizure with mild PRES, 1.5T FLAIR (D) showed vasogenic edema, with a new punctate MH on SWI (E) and cortical and leptomeningeal contrast enhancement on postcontrast T1WI (F). After the episode of PRES clinically resolved, a 5-month follow-up MR image at 3T showed no edema on FLAIR (G), while the MH remained on SWI (H). The MH also persisted on a 1.5T SWI at 9 months (I ).
  • Fig 6. A 3-year-old child with a seizure from tacrolimus toxicity post– heart transplantation. Thirty-five days before the seizure, a pretransplantation surveillance MR imaging at 1.5T had FLAIR images that appeared to have normal findings (not shown). A, At presentation with PRES, a 1.5T FLAIR image demonstrates edema of the caudate nuclei and frontal lobes (arrows) as well as bilateral parieto-occipital edema (not shown), considered moderate severity. There was dark SAH (dashed arrows, B) and multiple frontal, parietal, and occipital cortical/subcortical MHs (arrows) on SWI (B and C) at presentation, which totaled 20 MHs. On the follow-up 3T MR imaging 8 days later, the regions of vasogenic edema are nearly resolved on FLAIR images (not shown), while SWI demonstrates improved but persistent SAH (dashed arrows, D); the MHs also persist on SWI (D and E). F, Review of SWI from the 35-day pretransplantation 1.5T MR imaging reveals that each of the 20 MHs (arrows) were present before the onset of PRES.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

McKinney, A. M., Sarikaya, B., Gustafson, C., & Truwit, C. L. (2012). Detection of microhemorrhage in posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome using susceptibility-weighted imaging. American Journal of Neuroradiology, 33(5), 896–903. https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A2886

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